Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Arkell Museum is a museum in Canajoharie, New York that has an extensive collection of American paintings, primarily from 1860–1940, as well as historical exhibits about the history of the Mohawk River Valley and of the Beech-Nut babyfood company. The Canajoharie Library was founded in 1924, and a gallery was added in 1927.
Canajoharie Historic District is a national historic district located at Canajoharie in Montgomery County, New York.It encompasses 836 contributing buildings, 4 contributing sites, 11 contributing structures, and 19 contributing objects in the central business district and surrounding residential sections of the village of Canajoharie.
List of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Montgomery County, New York. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, New York.
Canajoharie (/ ˌ k æ n ə dʒ ə ˈ h ɛər i /), also known as the "Upper Castle", was the name of one of two major towns of the Mohawk nation in 1738. The community stretched for a mile and a half along the southern bank of the Mohawk River , from a village known as Dekanohage westward to what is now Fort Plain, New York .
Canajoharie (/ ˌ k æ n ə dʒ ə ˈ h ɛər i /) is a town in Montgomery County, New York, United States. The population was 3,730 in 2010. [2] Canajoharie is located south of the Mohawk River on the southern border of the county. The Erie Canal passes along the northern town line. There is also a village of Canajoharie in the town.
Rice's Woods is an archaeological site located at Canajoharie in Montgomery County, New York.S. L. Frey, the pioneer Mohawk Valley archaeologist, believed that the Mohawk village site in Rice's Woods, on Big Nose, was Canajorha, the Middle Castle of the Mohawks after about 1677.
The historic "dummy light" in downtown Canajoharie, New York. It was removed from the intersection in November 2021. Van Alstyne Homestead in Canajoharie is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The current village is located east of the historic Canajoharie, one of two major towns of the Mohawk nation in the late 17th and 18th ...
Mohawk Upper Castle Historic District is a historic district in Herkimer County, New York that was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1993. [2] Located south of the Mohawk River, it includes the Indian Castle Church, built in 1769 by Sir William Johnson, British Superintendent of Indian Affairs, as a missionary church for the Mohawk in the western part of their territory; the Brant ...